Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction Understanding Pound
- 2 Pound and the making of modernism
- 3 Early poetry 1908-1920
- 4 Early Cantos I-XLI
- 5 Middle Cantos XLII-LXXI
- 6 Late Cantos LXXII-CXVII
- 7 Beyond The Cantos
- 8 The texts of The Cantos
- 9 Pound as critic
- 10 Pound as translator
- 11 Pound and the visual arts
- 12 Pound and music
- 13 Pound's politics and economics
- 14 Pound, women and gender
- 15 Pound and antisemitism
- Further reading
- Index
9 - Pound as critic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction Understanding Pound
- 2 Pound and the making of modernism
- 3 Early poetry 1908-1920
- 4 Early Cantos I-XLI
- 5 Middle Cantos XLII-LXXI
- 6 Late Cantos LXXII-CXVII
- 7 Beyond The Cantos
- 8 The texts of The Cantos
- 9 Pound as critic
- 10 Pound as translator
- 11 Pound and the visual arts
- 12 Pound and music
- 13 Pound's politics and economics
- 14 Pound, women and gender
- 15 Pound and antisemitism
- Further reading
- Index
Summary
Ezra Pound published some seven books that can fall under the heading Literary Criticism. The majority of these were collections of previously printed essays: Favannes and Divisions (1918), Instigations (1920), Make It New (1934), Polite Essays (1937). None of these has remained in print, having been replaced by T. S. Eliot's excellent selection Literary Essays (1954), and by William Cookson's omnium gatherum, Selected Prose (1973). These anthologies contain some of Pound's better known and more important critical writings. But they are necessarily uneven, for they have not been conceived as a single effort by their author.
A more unified picture of Pound the critic emerges from the books and pamphlets that he envisaged and brought forth as a whole. These are The Spirit of Romance (1910), How To Read (1931), ABC of Reading (1934), Guide to Kulchur (1938), Carta da Visita (1942). The two last are devoted only in part to literature, but this is characteristic of the uncompartmentalized way Pound worked. In fact, Jefferson and/or Mussolini (1935) could be added to the list of books of criticism that were created as wholes. These unified volumes make for exciting reading because they move with their own momentum, in a somewhat improvisational fashion, from day to day, and often refer to their writing in process by place and date.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Ezra Pound , pp. 188 - 203Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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